Too bad, Maddy. This is a much smaller bunch of needles and I'll puit it to
use tonight. I have a plumber coming to fix the messed up back spigot
tomorrow, and the pile might be in his way. Hopefully he'll put an end to
the long-standing puddle b4 I have west nile virus on my hands. Think I'd
rather have ants.
Kitty
----- Original Message -----
From: <MyTGoldens@aol.com>
To: <gardenchat@hort.net>; <gardenchat-digest@hort.net>
Sent: Thursday, June 23, 2005 1:02 PM
Subject: [CHAT] Speaking of pine needle mulch . . .
> I had to grin when I read Kitty's question about using pine needles for
> mulch. I wrote the following short essay and sent it in to a gardening
> magazine a
> number of years ago, for possible publication. No, it didn't get picked
for
> publication, but all of you might get a kick out of this true story from
my
> younger gardening days!
>
> *************
>
> It was some years ago when I was trying to establish my garden on an acre
of
> miserable hardpan soil, and desperate for any kind of organic matter I
could
> lay my hands, but where was all this wonderful organic matter to come
from?
>
> I happen to be very fond of pine needles, so I was thrilled when my
neighbor
> told me she had a friend with a large stand of pine trees on her property
> who wanted the pine needles raked up. Why, I canbt imagine, but she got
the
> job
> done for nothing and I got the pine needles for free. What a windfall!
For 2
> whole days I collected endless bags of pine needles, laboriously picking
out
> the twigs and branches, and piled them into my van. I figured I'd let them
> compost for a season, and have wonderful, rich organic mulch which would
not
> only loosen up the clay, but would help acidify my extremely alkaline
soil. I
> piled the pine needles nearly 4 feet deep in a far corner of my property,
and
> left nature to do her work until the following year, while I dreamed of
> mountains of fluffy pine needle compost.
>
> One day I decided it was time to harvest my brown gold, and took my
> pitchfork and wheelbarrow to the compost site. I thrust the pitchfork
deep
> into the
> pile and started forking it into the wheelbarrow. Suddenly I felt
something
> stinging my legs. I looked down and to my horror discovered some kind of
very
> aggressive ants crawling all over me! I must have been a humorous site as
I
> thrashed about, screeching and swiping wildly at the biting insects. When
I
> managed to get them off me, I looked into the gaping hole in the compost
> pile,
> and the whole pile appeared to be moving! All that work, all that time,
all
> those beautiful pine needles had turned into one gigantic ant hill!
>
> The burning and itching from the ant bites subsided after several days,
but
> I
> bll never get over the bstingb of watching all that beautiful mulch go
> to
> waste. (I was not interested in spreading biting ants around my entire
> garden!)
>
> We have recently moved to another part of the state, and I am now faced
with
> starting my gardens all over again. Fortunately, it turns out I have a
> friend right across the road who has a barn full of donkey manure which
she
> says I
> am welcome to use for my garden. I understand it makes a great organic
soil
> amendment after composting for a year or so. . .
>
> Maddy Mason
> Hudson Valley, NY zone 5/6
>
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